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Dalai Lama brushes off health fears after cancelling US tour
by Staff Writers
Dharamsala, India (AFP) Oct 3, 2015


Denmark to probe removal of pro-Tibet demonstrators in 2012
Copenhagen (AFP) Oct 2, 2015 - The Danish government said Friday it would investigate why police forcibly kept pro-Tibet activists from demonstrating and holding up Tibetan flags during a 2012 state visit of then Chinese president Hu Jintao.

"The case raises doubts over whether the authorities adequately protected fundamental democratic freedoms," Justice Minister Soren Pind said in a statement.

Denmark's government was led by the Social Democrats at the time of the visit in June 2012. The country is now ruled by the conservative Venstre party.

A court last week ruled that the removal of a demonstrator during the three-day visit had been unlawful, and said that police had tried three times to prevent people from displaying the Tibetan flag.

Amateur footage aired by national public broadcaster DR showed police officers grabbing a Tibetan flag from the hands of a female demonstrator, reportedly outside the parliament, and trying to take another down from a pole on an activist's bicycle.

According to a Copenhagen police document made public Friday, police were ordered to make sure no one in the Chinese president's convoy could see the demonstrators.

Denmark's PET intelligence agency believed it was "crucial" for the Chinese delegation not to "lose face" during a potential confrontation with pro-Tibet activists, the document added.

The document surfaced after Copenhagen police previously told the justice ministry and parliament's legal affairs committee that they did not order the removal of demonstrators.

Denmark's Independent Police Complaints Authority has also launched its own inquiry.

China froze relations with Denmark in 2009 after two successive prime ministers welcomed Tibet's exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama at the official government residence.

Relations were repaired in late 2010 when the Danish parliament made it clear that Copenhagen had a one-China policy and did not back independence for the Himalayan territory.

The Dalai Lama said he was in "excellent" health Saturday after doctors told him to scrap a tour of the United States as he returned to his home in northern India.

The 80-year-old Tibetan spiritual leader walked unaided from his plane after it landed at Dharamsala airport and spoke with a small group of followers who had gathered to welcome him back, before telling reporters that there was no cause for concern.

"I'm okay," he said in brief comments. "I went for check-up, then basically excellent."

He said that he had received some "advice" from his doctors but gave no further details.

The exiled Buddhist leader, who maintains a punishing schedule, had been due to embark on a tour of the US when doctors told him to rest.

He then checked in to the prestigious Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, according to CNN.

The Nobel laureate had been due to receive the prestigious Liberty medal in Philadelphia in recognition of his campaigning work on human rights.

Although he has been in generally good health, he was hospitalised in Mumbai in 2002 with an infection.

Concerns about the impact of his heavy workload also led him to step down as the political head of the exiled Tibetan leadership in 2011.

The Dalai Lama fled across the Himalayas to India in 1959 in the aftermath of a failed uprising among Tibetans to Chinese rule.

Although he insists he does not seek independence for Tibet, China regards him as a "splittist" and takes a dim view of any governments who agree to meet the Dalai Lama.

Many observers believe that China is confident that the Tibetan movement will lose much of its potency and global appeal when the charismatic Dalai Lama dies.

The Dalai Lama has also increasingly spoken of succession and has not ruled out picking his reincarnation before his death, fearing that China would instead pick its own boy whom it would use to advance its agenda.

His stance has led Chinese communist rulers, who are officially atheist, to insist that the Dalai Lama can only reincarnate after his death.


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